Explosions rock Indian city of Hyderabad Reports say 12 dead and 52 injured with one blast occurring near a busy market bus stop
- An injured person receives treatment at the Omini hospital Kothapet in Hyderabad on Thursday. At least 15 people were killed and 52 injured when three bombs in crowded areas shook the southern Indian city of Hyderabad late on Thursday, police said.
- Image Credit: AFP
- Indian authorities and onlookers are pictured at the site of a bomb blast at Dilshuk Nagar in Hyderabad on Thursday. At least 18 people were killed and 52 wounded when bombs ripped through crowded areas of the Indian city of Hyderabad on Thursday in what the prime minister called a "dastardly act".
- Image Credit: AFP
- Indian authorities and onlookers are pictured at the site of a bomb blast at Dilshuk Nagar in Hyderabad on Thursday. At least 18 people were killed and 52 wounded when bombs ripped through crowded areas of the Indian city of Hyderabad on Thursday in what the prime minister called a "dastardly act".
- Image Credit: AFP
- An injured Indian receives treatment at the Omini hospital Kothapet in Hyderabad on February 21, 2013. At least 12 people were killed and 52 injured when three bombs shook the southern Indian city of Hyderabad late on Thursday, police said.
Police said many of the injured were in critical condition in hospital.
"This is a dastardly act and the guilty will not go unpunished," Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh said of the attacks, the deadliest to hit India
since 13 people died in a 2011 bombing outside the High Court in the
capital New Delhi.
But Singh also appealed for "calm" in the aftermath of the Hyderabad blasts.
City police said there had been three explosions, but Home Minister Sushil Kumar Shinde said he could only confirm two.
"The two bombs were placed on two different bicycles and the distance
between them was about 100 to 150 metres," Shinde told reporters in New
Delhi.
He said Indian authorities had received "intelligence inputs in the
[recent] days about the possibility of attacks and this information was
shared with other states".
Police said the blasts went off in quick succession.
Huge crowds gathered near the site of the explosions in the Hyderabad
suburb of Dilsukh Nagar as police struggled to collect evidence.
"Ambulances have been rushed to the spot. Bodies have arrived and over
50 injured people have been brought to the spot," Kailash Nath, an
officer at the Osmania General Hospital, told AFP.
At the hospital, bloodied victims lay on stretchers as sobbing relatives pleaded for information about their loved ones.
Nath said that nine bodies had arrived at the hospital and 35 people were undergoing surgery.
The blasts came on the same day as India's parliament opened for its
key budget session, amid tensions following the hanging earlier this
month of the Kashmiri separatist, Mohammed Afzal Guru.
The execution of Guru, who had been convicted of helping to plot a 2001
attack on the Indian parliament that left 10 people dead, had sparked
protests in the disputed Muslim-majority region of Indian Kashmir.
India has made efforts to improve domestic security since the 2008
Mumbai attacks, in which 10 Islamist gunmen laid siege to the city,
killing 166 people.
But experts say security forces still suffer from weak intelligence-gathering at the grass roots.
New Delhi blamed Pakistan-based militants for the Mumbai attacks,
sending relations between the nuclear-armed neighbours into a deep
freeze.
source:http://gulfnews.com
source:http://gulfnews.com
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